France starts new MH370 probe, after the official report failed to work out what really happened

AP; iStock; Skye Gould/Business InsiderThe fate of MH370 has become one of the world’s biggest aviation mysteries.

Flight MH370 disappeared four years ago with 239 people on board.

The Malaysian government in July issued what was supposed to be the definitive report on the disaster – but provided very little in the way of answers.

Relatives of those on board were left angry and called for the Malaysian government to release satellite data so others can analyse it.

The branch of French police that deals with airport security and aircraft terrorism will launch a probe to look at the satellite data, French newspaper Le Parisian reports.

But the French government has not formally announced an investigation.

France has opened an investigation into the fate of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 after years of investigations spearheaded by other governments failed to find the plane or determine why it went missing.

French newspaper Le Parisien now reports that the Air Transport Gendarmerie, which works on airport security, will launch its own investigation.

Investigators will look to verify technical data transmitted from the flight including data from Inmarsat, the British global satellite network which tracked the airline. Immarsat tracked pings from the plane to the southern Indian Ocean off the coast of Australia, where the plane is believed to have crashed.

France will re-examine “all the technical data” provided by Inmarsat in order to “verify its authenticity,” Le Parisien reports.

But the French government has not formally announced an investigation.

Voice 370, a group comprising of and acting for relatives of those lost on MH370, called on Malaysian authorities to “share all available data with independent experts for a thorough peer review and analysis” in a statement released on Tuesday.